Search from various Tiếng Anh teachers...
Jessy
Sometimes you hear people say something like "ich bin gegangen" or "ich habe gesagt" to describe a past action in German.
Here the verbs are conjugated according to the German Perfekt (past perfect) tense.
A verb is formed as a past participle (gehen -> gegangen, sagen -> gesagt) and it's combined with a helper verb (either with "sein" -> "(ich) bin" or "haben" -> "(ich) habe").
But how would you know if you need to either use "sein" (e.g. as "ich bin") or "haben" (e.g. as "ich habe") to form the correct verb form in past perfect?
Rule of thumb (with exceptions to the rule, as always):
Use "haben"
- with action verbs
Use "sein"
- with verbs describing state
- with verbs describing directional movement
Examples:
zu machen
--> action verb --> use "haben"
ich habe gemacht
du hast gemacht
er/sie/es hat gemacht
...
zu kochen
--> action verb --> use "haben"
ich habe gekocht
du hast gekocht
er/sie/es hat gekocht
...
zu gehen
--> verb describing movement --> use "sein"
ich bin gegangen
du bist gegangen
er/sie/es ist gegangen
...
zu sein
--> verb describing state --> use "sein"
ich bin gewesen
du bist gewesen
er/sie/es ist gewesen
...
Try this grammar quiz below to test your knowledge on the German Perfekt form!
Complete the following sentence (Hint: "schreiben" is an action verb, "laufen" is a verb describing dir. movement): Gestern ____ [1] ich nach Hause gelaufen und ____ [2] einen Brief geschrieben.
1) habe 2) bin
1) habe 2) habe
1) bin 2) bin
1) bin 2) habe
57 đã tham gia kiểm tra
8 Thg 12 2023 07:27
Jessy
Kỹ năng ngôn ngữ
Tiếng Anh, Tiếng Pháp, Tiếng Đức, Tiếng Hàn Quốc, Khác
Ngôn ngữ đang học
Tiếng Hàn Quốc
Bài viết Bạn Có lẽ Cũng Thích

Same Word, Different Meaning: American, British, and South African English
21 lượt thích · 17 Bình luận

How to Sound Confident in English (Even When You’re Nervous)
15 lượt thích · 12 Bình luận

Marketing Vocabulary and Phrases for Business English Learners
13 lượt thích · 6 Bình luận
Thêm bài viết
